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Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York.
540-530 B.C.
Bring
some Greek mythology into your very own home with this well crafted museum
replica of a stuning piece of classical Greek sculpture. This ancienct Greek
statue is sure to lead to intersting conversations and makes a special gift!
This
sphinx was a part of a Attic grave monument of the middle archaic period
that reflected the opulence of the wealthy class of that time. The sphinx was
placed atop a tall shaft, decorated with high relief sculpture and crowned by
a cavetto capital. The shaft was supported by a rectangular base. All together
the monument stands over 13 feet high. The sphinx is shown crouching instead
of seated. The Greek sphinx had a woman's head, lion's body, serpent's tail
and eagle's wind.
In
Greek mythology, the sphinx was sent by Hera to punish Thebes for
displeasing the Goddess. The sphinx settled on Mount Phicium, near the city
and asked everyone who passed by to answer a riddle she had learned from the
three muses: "What being, with only one voice, has sometimes two feet,
sometimes three, sometimes four and is weakest when it has the most?" Anyone
unable to render the correct answer was immediately slain. One day Oedipus
chanced along that road and guessed the answer: "Man, because he crawls on all
four as an infant, stands firmly on his two feet in his youth and leans on a
staff in his old age." Completely shattered by her defeat, the sphinx threw
herself from the mountain and Oedipus was acclaimed king.
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Features
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- Has pehnomenal detail work and craftsmenship
- Mrings a bit of history right into your home
- May be found in a museum store gift shop
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Specifications
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Size |
10" H (25 cm) |
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Weight |
5 lbs |
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Material |
Casting stone |
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Finish |
Antique stone |
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See Also
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